14,738 research outputs found
Information systems evaluation: Mini-track introduction
abreast of technological innovations. Yet, companies are becoming more aware that a competitive advantage can not be achieved,
or even maintained by utilizing the latest technology. Indeed, it is becoming more apparent that a strategic competitive advantage
will not be achieved through embraced technology alone but, in the way companies approach the evaluation, management and
exploitation of their human, organizational and technology based assets and infrastructure.
In support of this, Sohal et al. (2001) reported the results of a large-scale survey that demonstrated the limited Information
Technology (IT) enabled business benefits resulting in service and manufacturing sectors.
The survey highlighted that many of the benefits achieved through adopting IT/IS were limited to improvements in productivity
and cost alone. Clearly, such results are surprising given the emphasis the normative literature has placed on the strategic benefits
achievable from IT/IS. As a result of the far reaching conclusions reported by Sohal et al. (2001), many organisational have begun
to question the scope and depth of those IT-enabled business benefits that are not achieved by those companies proactively
adopting IT/IS
Nonaffine Correlations in Random Elastic Media
Materials characterized by spatially homogeneous elastic moduli undergo
affine distortions when subjected to external stress at their boundaries, i.e.,
their displacements \uv (\xv) from a uniform reference state grow linearly
with position \xv, and their strains are spatially constant. Many materials,
including all macroscopically isotropic amorphous ones, have elastic moduli
that vary randomly with position, and they necessarily undergo nonaffine
distortions in response to external stress. We study general aspects of
nonaffine response and correlation using analytic calculations and numerical
simulations. We define nonaffine displacements \uv' (\xv) as the difference
between \uv (\xv) and affine displacements, and we investigate the
nonaffinity correlation function
and related functions. We introduce four model random systems with random
elastic moduli induced by locally random spring constants, by random
coordination number, by random stress, or by any combination of these. We show
analytically and numerically that scales as A |\xv|^{-(d-2)}
where the amplitude is proportional to the variance of local elastic moduli
regardless of the origin of their randomness. We show that the driving force
for nonaffine displacements is a spatial derivative of the random elastic
constant tensor times the constant affine strain. Random stress by itself does
not drive nonaffine response, though the randomness in elastic moduli it may
generate does. We study models with both short and long-range correlations in
random elastic moduli.Comment: 22 Pages, 18 figures, RevTeX
Ten years tracking the migrations of small landbirds: Lessons learned in the golden age of bio-logging
In 2007, the first miniature light-level geolocators were deployed on small landbirds, revolutionizing the study of migration. In this paper, we review studies that have used geolocators to track small landbirds with the goal of summarizing research themes and identifying remaining important gaps in understanding. We also highlight research and opportunities using 2 recently developed tracking technologies: archival GPS tags and automated radio-telemetry systems. In our review, we found that most (54%) geolocator studies focused on quantifying natural history of migration, such as identifying migration routes, nonbreeding range, and migration timing. Studies of behavioral ecology (20%) uncovered proximate drivers of movements, including en route habitat quality; that migration routes, but not timing, may be flexible in some species; and different age and sex classes show significant differences in migration strategy. Studies of the evolution of migration (9%) have illustrated that migration is a potential barrier to hybridizing species or subspecies, and some work has correlated gene polymorphisms and methylation patterns with migration behavior. Studies of migratory connectivity (11%) have shown that a moderate level of connectivity is common, although variability across and within species exists. Studies of seasonal interactions (7%) have found mixed results: in some cases, carryover effects have been identified; in other cases, carryover effects are buffered during intervening stages of the annual cycle. Archival GPS tags provide unprecedented precision in locations of nonbreeding sites and migration routes, and will continue to improve understanding of migration across large spatial scales. Automated radio-telemetry systems are revolutionizing our knowledge of migratory stopover biology, and have led to discoveries of previously unknown stopover behaviors. Together, these tracking technologies will continue to provide insight into small migratory landbird movements and contribute important information for conservation of this rapidly declining group
Ten years tracking the migrations of small landbirds: Lessons learned in the golden age of bio-logging
In 2007, the first miniature light-level geolocators were deployed on small landbirds, revolutionizing the study of migration. In this paper, we review studies that have used geolocators to track small landbirds with the goal of summarizing research themes and identifying remaining important gaps in understanding. We also highlight research and opportunities using 2 recently developed tracking technologies: archival GPS tags and automated radio-telemetry systems. In our review, we found that most (54%) geolocator studies focused on quantifying natural history of migration, such as identifying migration routes, nonbreeding range, and migration timing. Studies of behavioral ecology (20%) uncovered proximate drivers of movements, including en route habitat quality; that migration routes, but not timing, may be flexible in some species; and different age and sex classes show significant differences in migration strategy. Studies of the evolution of migration (9%) have illustrated that migration is a potential barrier to hybridizing species or subspecies, and some work has correlated gene polymorphisms and methylation patterns with migration behavior. Studies of migratory connectivity (11%) have shown that a moderate level of connectivity is common, although variability across and within species exists. Studies of seasonal interactions (7%) have found mixed results: in some cases, carryover effects have been identified; in other cases, carryover effects are buffered during intervening stages of the annual cycle. Archival GPS tags provide unprecedented precision in locations of nonbreeding sites and migration routes, and will continue to improve understanding of migration across large spatial scales. Automated radio-telemetry systems are revolutionizing our knowledge of migratory stopover biology, and have led to discoveries of previously unknown stopover behaviors. Together, these tracking technologies will continue to provide insight into small migratory landbird movements and contribute important information for conservation of this rapidly declining group
The Effective Potential And Additional Large Radius Compactified Space-Time Dimensions
The consequences of large radius extra space-time compactified dimensions on
the four dimensional one loop effective potential are investigated for a model
which includes scalar self interactions and Yukawa coupling to fermions. The
Kaluza-Klein tower of states associated with the extra compact dimensions
shifts the location of the effective potential minimum and modifies its
curvature. The dependence of these effects on the radius of the extra dimension
is illustrated for various choices of coupling constants and masses. For large
radii, the consequence of twisting the fermion boundary condition on the
compactified dimensions is numerically found to produce but a negligible effect
on the effective potential.Comment: 14 pages, LaTeX, 6 Postscript figure
Research study of some RAM antennas Final report, 18 Nov. 1964 - 18 Jun. 1965
Input impedance and radiation pattern determinations for cylindrical gap, waveguide excited and circular waveguide slot antenna array
Elastic Instability Triggered Pattern Formation
Recent experiments have exploited elastic instabilities in membranes to
create complex patterns. However, the rational design of such structures poses
many challenges, as they are products of nonlinear elastic behavior. We pose a
simple model for determining the orientational order of such patterns using
only linear elasticity theory which correctly predicts the outcomes of several
experiments. Each element of the pattern is modeled by a "dislocation dipole"
located at a point on a lattice, which then interacts elastically with all
other dipoles in the system. We explicitly consider a membrane with a square
lattice of circular holes under uniform compression and examine the changes in
morphology as it is allowed to relax in a specified direction.Comment: 15 pages, 7 figures, the full catastroph
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Hydropyrolysis of high molecular weight organic matter in Murchison
Hydropyrolysis of the Murchison macromolecular material releases polyaromatic compounds including phenanthrene, carbazole, fluoranthene, pyrene, chrysene, perylene, benzoperylene and coronene units with varying degrees of alklyation
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